Police investigating four Wash. murders following alleged serial killer’s death

This undated handout photo provided by the Anchorage Police Department shows Israel Keyes. Keyes, charged in the death of Alaska barista Samantha Koenig, has killed himself, and authorities say he was linked to at least seven other possible slayings in three other states. Keyes was found dead in his Anchorage jail cell Sunday, Dec. 2, 2012. Officials say it was a suicide. (AP Photo/Anchorage Police, file)

An alleged serial killer claimed he killed four people in Washington state before killing others across the country.

Israel Keyes, 34, apparently killed himself in a prison in Alaska where he was being held for the slaying of an 18-year-old woman abducted from a coffee kiosk in Anchorage in February.

In regards to statements Keyes made to Anchorage authorities, Frank Harrill, the FBI’s senior supervisory agent in Spokane, told the Seattle Times the investigation is “very active.”

The Times reports Keyes had addresses in Colville in Stevens County and Neah Bay in Clallam County, as well as a post office box in the latter. Keyes also served in the Army from July 1998 through July 2001 and in 1998 was stationed at Joint Base Lewis-McChord.

It doesn’t appear that Keyes had a felony record in Washington state, but was cited for driving with a suspended license in Thurston County in January 2002.

Harrill said so far, the investigation has not focused on specific victims, but rather at looking among known homicides and missing persons and comparing them to the information Keyes gave investigators in Alaska.

Keyes was arrested in Texas after using the 18-year-old Texan woman’s debit card. Keyes may also be linked to five other deaths and robberies around the country, authorities said.

Keyes had confessed to killing Bill and Lorraine Currier, 50 and 55, of Essex, providing details about their abduction and deaths that authorities had not released to the public, officials said at news conference Monday afternoon in Burlington, VT.

Authorities said Keyes took a gun and silencer with him when he left Alaska, intent on killing someone.

Keyes told police he broke into the Currier home on June 8, 2011, went into their bedroom, bound them with zip ties and forced them into their car, authorities said.

He then drove them to an abandoned house in Essex and tied Bill to a stool in the basement, while Lorraine Currier tried to escape, Chittenden County state’s attorney T.J. Donovan said. Discovering this, Keyes ran out and tackled Lorraine, and Bill then tried to escape.

He shot Bill Currier with the silenced gun he had brought from Alaska and then sexually assaulted and strangled Lorraine Currier, Donovan said, his voice breaking.

“They fought to the end,” Donovan said, adding that they showed “extraordinary bravery and love for each other.”

Lorraine Currier’s purse was later found to be missing from the home, and authorities have said money appeared to be just a partial motive in Keyes’ crimes. The Curriers did not know Keyes and did nothing to contribute, U.S. Attorney Tristram Coffin said.

“By all accounts, they were friendly, peaceful, good people who encountered a force of pure evil acting at random,” he said.

The house was torn down and the debris taken to a landfill. The Curriers’ bodies have never been found.

Keyes told investigators he would stop talking to police if his name was released publicly in the Currier case.

Police said that after the killings, Keyes left the Curriers’ car in a parking lot and drove his rental car to Maine. He then returned to Vermont and noticed the crime scene tape around the Currier home. Keyes told police he left Vermont and continued to follow the Currier case through the Vermont press.

Essex Police Lt. George Murtie, who interviewed Keyes about the Curriers’ killing, described his demeanor as “very calm” with “no display of emotion.”

Authorities said they may never know the full extent of Keyes’ crimes because he parsed out only a little information at a time, withholding names and locations of most of his victims.

Keyes also indicated he killed four others in Washington state and one person in New York state but didn’t give the victims’ names, authorities said. He also confessed to bank robberies in New York and Texas.